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Indian Company Investor Calls

90s Repertoire Drives FY27 20% Growth Target

April 30, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

Tips Music Limited — Q4 FY26 Earnings Call (held Apr 23, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management repeatedly emphasizes “strong performance”, “strong growth”, “encouraging engagement”, and “sustainable long-term growth”.
  • Forward-looking language is confident but tempered with some “too early” / “don’t want to over-promise” phrasing around FY27 targets.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Catalogue-driven momentum (especially 90s repertoire): Management attributes growth to “90s repertoire is really doing exceptionally well” and recurring “trending” effects across platforms.
  • Content slate + disciplined acquisition: FY27 content spend guided at 20–25% of topline; acquisitions are conditional on quality and payback (“market is very competitive… very cautious… recovering our money in stipulated time”).
  • Digital engagement strength despite Shorts volatility: Q4 engagement described as healthy; Shorts views declined, but management insists it’s not expected to materially impact the Shorts renewal deal.
  • Margin resilience with accounting-driven quarter noise: Employee cost spike explained as Q4 annual increment provisions; content cost ratio down explained by movie release postponement.
  • Capital returns remain central: FY26 dividend of INR166 crores highlighted as a “source of joy”; management frames caution on acquisitions as capital discipline rather than lack of opportunity.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: FY27 growth targets & drivers

  • Core questions
  • What explains Q4 outperformance and what are FY27 growth expectations?
  • Is the FY27 target conservative vs prior guidance?
  • Management response
  • Q4 growth attributed mainly to catalogue/90s repertoire.
  • FY27 target stated as 20% top-line and 20% bottom-line growth; management says it’s a target but “don’t want to over-promise”.
  • When asked about potentially achieving higher (30/30), management: “Yes I want to achieve that target… But… keep the target at present 20-20%.”
  • Notable signals
  • Stronger-than-guidance performance in Q4, but FY27 guidance is deliberately dampened (confidence with caution).

Theme B: YouTube Shorts views decline & renewal risk

  • Core questions
  • Why are Shorts views declining and does it affect the June ’26 renewal value?
  • Is the “peak views” period due to viral spikes (normalization)?
  • Management response
  • Shorts views decline attributed to normal quarter-to-quarter virality; long-video growth remains on track.
  • We don’t see any material impact” on renewal deal; underlying run-rate is “healthy”.
  • Peak view periods described as viral-driven, implying current levels are more normalized.
  • Renewal negotiation timeline: management says they will start negotiating by month-end / next month beginning.
  • Evasive/partial
  • No quantitative estimate of renewal uplift (“what kind of a jump…” not answered with numbers).
  • “No material impact” is asserted despite visible view decline—investors may view this as comfort language.

Theme C: Revenue mix (digital vs non-digital) & sustainability

  • Core questions
  • Why did digital mix dip slightly in Q4 (70% FY26 vs higher in prior quarters)?
  • Is non-digital growth sustainable or driven by one-offs?
  • Management response
  • Digital headwinds due to platform closures earlier in the year.
  • Non-digital (publishing + public performance) “have done well for us for the full year.”
  • Q4 non-digital increase framed as recurring; management discourages quarter-only interpretation.
  • Notable
  • Management repeatedly asks analysts to view year-wise, not quarter-wise—common but can also reduce transparency.

Theme D: Content cost ratio volatility & accounting timing

  • Core questions
  • Why content cost % fell sharply (15.8% vs 23% last year) vs earlier target (~18%)?
  • How will content costs be recognized for upcoming movies (Q1 FY27)?
  • Management response
  • Content cost drop explained by postponement: “Hai Jawani… got postponed to June,” causing timing shift.
  • Upcoming movies’ music costs will be accounted in Q1 (explicit confirmation).
  • Management also reiterates their policy: write off entire album cost when songs release.
  • Strong/clear
  • This is one of the more concrete explanations in the call (timing-based, not demand-based).

Theme E: Warner deal economics & transparency

  • Core questions
  • How much revenue comes from Warner / paid subscription / YouTube vs Warner?
  • Is Warner performance on track vs expectations?
  • Management response
  • Warner revenue split not disclosed (“competitive world… can’t reveal”).
  • Warner performance described as “in line with our expectation.”
  • Paid subscription share: 10–15% of digital revenue; Shorts revenue “not material.”
  • Evasive
  • Multiple requests for Warner/YouTube breakdown were refused.

Theme F: Paid subscription growth & monetization

  • Core questions
  • How much of revenue is from paid subscribers vs ads?
  • How does bundling (telecom packs) affect realization?
  • Management response
  • Paid subscription: 10–15% of digital revenue; last year 10–12%; subscription revenue growing 30–40% CAGR (qualitative).
  • Bundled services: management “don’t prefer any bundled services” due to lower payout.
  • Credibility
  • Subscription mix numbers are provided, but no absolute revenue or detailed bridge.

Theme G: Public performance segment growth thesis

  • Core questions
  • Is the public performance market expansion real and what could it become?
  • Management response
  • Very bullish: expects industry to grow rapidly; management cites compliance tailwinds and online licensing ease.
  • Mentions potential for large market size (INR10,000–20,000 crores) but also qualifies that it depends on government support and adoption rates.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • FY27 growth target: 20% top-line growth and 20% bottom-line growth (repeated multiple times).
  • FY27 content spend as % of topline: 20%–25% (explicitly confirmed).
  • FY27 content cost absolute intent (from Q&A): management indicated desire to spend INR80–90 crores (implying higher spend than FY26’s lower content cost year).
  • Paid subscription contribution (qualitative range): 10–15% of digital revenue (not a guidance, but a stated expectation/range).

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Management wants to “achieve 30%” but keeps FY27 target at 20% to avoid over-promising.
  • Shorts views decline is framed as non-material for renewal; management expects no major impact.
  • Non-digital segments (publishing + public performance + brands) are positioned as steady contributors.
  • Content acquisition remains selective due to valuation/cost discipline and payback concerns.

5. Standout Statements (direct / highly revealing)

  • On FY27 conservatism:I don’t want to over-promise. So let’s keep the target… 20-20%.
  • On Shorts renewal risk:We don’t see any material impact of this declining views.”
  • On content acquisition discipline:We are very cautious… recovering our money in stipulated time.
  • On content cost timing: content cost ratio drop due to postponement: “got postponed to June.”
  • On capital allocation philosophy:It’s better that we should all take dividend… and we should have money to place somewhere else.
  • On Warner transparency refusal:We can’t reveal that. It’s a competitive world.
  • On subscription monetization stance:Primarily… we don’t prefer any bundled services… payout would be lesser.

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
Renewal confidence vs observable metric decline: Shorts views down, yet management asserts “no material impact” without providing renewal value sensitivity.
Limited disclosure on key economics: repeated refusal to share Warner/YouTube breakdowns reduces ability to validate growth drivers.
Guidance dampening: FY27 target reduced to 20% despite strong momentum—could be prudence, but also may signal uncertainty.

Positive signals
Clear accounting/timing explanations for content cost and employee cost spikes.
Strong engagement metrics cited (subscriber base, Instagram/YouTube view milestones).
Subscription mix improving (paid subscription share inching higher; subscription growth 30–40% CAGR stated).


7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Q1 FY26 (Jul 30, 2025): cautious but hopeful; still aiming for 30% while acknowledging industry disruptions and YouTube policy impacts.
  • Q2 FY26 (Oct 15, 2025): more constructive; maintained 20% guidance and discussed paid ecosystem tailwinds; acknowledged OTT closures and paywall pressure as temporary.
  • Q3 FY26 (Jan 19, 2026): notably more optimistic—management said strong momentum and upwardly revised PAT guidance to 25% from 20%.
  • Q4 FY26 (Apr 23, 2026): optimistic on performance; however, FY27 guidance is kept at 20/20 even when asked about 30/30.
  • Shift classification: More Cautious (relative to Q3’s upward revision and stronger implied momentum), mainly in guidance framing.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Past statement (Q3 FY26):upwardly revise our PAT growth guidance to 25%
  • What happened now: FY26 PAT growth reported 30% (delivered above 25%).
  • Flag: ✅ Delivered
  • Past statement (Q2 FY26 / earlier): expectation of short-form monetization moving toward revenue share over time
  • Current call: Shorts monetization still described as fixed fee with renewal/renegotiation; management says “not material” revenue from Shorts currently.
  • Flag: ⏳ Delayed / still not fully monetized (no clear transition to revenue share yet)
  • Past statement (Q3 FY26): YouTube Shorts renewal “next year” / timing around June
  • Current call: renewal in June ’26 reiterated; negotiation to start soon.
  • Flag: ✅ On timeline (renewal window consistent), but value uplift not quantified.

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “growth via new releases + platform tailwinds” → “growth via catalogue/trending + disciplined spend.”
  • Q3 emphasized momentum and guidance revision; Q4 leans harder on 90s repertoire and “trending effect” as the core driver.
  • Shorts views decline now more explicitly addressed as a renewal risk question, with management pushing back on materiality.
  • Public performance becomes more prominent in Q&A (large market thesis), whereas earlier calls focused more on streaming/subscription and Shorts.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • High credibility on accounting/timing explanations (content cost postponement; employee increment provisions).
  • Medium credibility on “no material impact” claims regarding Shorts renewal despite view declines.
  • Low-to-medium transparency on partner economics (Warner/YouTube breakdowns consistently refused), limiting external validation.

Overall credibility: Medium

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand/engagement: Improving/stable—management cites subscriber growth and recurring virality.
  • Margins: Stable/high EBITDA narrative; content cost volatility explained as timing, not structural deterioration.
  • Expansion / new segments: Public performance thesis becomes more aggressive; brands/publishing highlighted as steady.
  • Regulatory/platform risk: YouTube policy changes and paywall pressure acknowledged earlier; now Shorts renewal risk is the main unresolved variable.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • Management’s repeated instruction to judge performance year-wise suggests quarter-to-quarter volatility is meaningful (content release timing, platform mix shifts).
  • The combination of:
  • strong dividend/capital returns, and
  • cautious acquisition stance due to valuation/payback
    implies management may be prioritizing capital preservation over aggressive growth—consistent with the FY27 20/20 “conservative” framing.